"Get up, you idiot!" I shouted, "and let us look for the others. This

is the end of your folly in making me attack a herd of buffalo in reeds.

Get up. Am I to stop here till I choke?"

"Do you mean to tell me that I have no mortal wound, Macumazahn?" he

asked, with a return of cheerfulness, accepting the castigation in good

part, for he was not one who bore malice. "Oh, I am glad to hear it, for

now I shall live to make those cowards who fired the reeds sorry that

they are not dead; also to finish off that wild beast, for I hit him,

Macumazahn, I hit him."

"I don't know whether you hit him; I know he hit you," I replied, as I

shoved him off the rock and ran towards the tilted tree where I had last

seen Scowl.

Here I beheld another strange sight. Scowl was still seated in the

eagle's nest that he shared with two nearly fledged young birds, one of

which, having been injured, was uttering piteous cries. Nor did it cry

in vain, for its parents, which were of that great variety of kite that

the Boers call "lammefange", or lamb-lifters, had just arrived to its

assistance, and were giving their new nestling, Scowl, the best doing

that man ever received at the beak and claws of feathered kind. Seen

through those rushing smoke wreaths, the combat looked perfectly

titanic; also it was one of the noisiest to which I ever listened, for

I don't know which shrieked the more loudly, the infuriated eagles or

their victim.

Seeing how things stood, I burst into a roar of laughter, and just then

Scowl grabbed the leg of the male bird, that was planted in his breast

while it removed tufts of his wool with its hooked beak, and leapt

boldly from the nest, which had become too hot to hold him. The eagle's

outspread wings broke his fall, for they acted as a parachute; and so

did Umbezi, upon whom he chanced to land. Springing from the prostrate

shape of the chief, who now had a bruise in front to match that behind,

Scowl, covered with pecks and scratches, ran like a lamp-lighter,

leaving me to collect my second gun, which he had dropped at the bottom

of the tree, but fortunately without injuring it. The Kafirs

gave him another name after that encounter, which meant

"He-who-fights-birds-and-gets-the-worst-of-it."

Well, we escaped from the line of the smoke, a dishevelled trio--indeed,

Umbezi had nothing left on him except his head ring--and shouted for the

others, if perchance they had not been trodden to death in the rush. The

first to arrive was Saduko, who looked quite calm and untroubled, but

stared at us in astonishment, and asked coolly what we had been doing

to get in such a state. I replied in appropriate language, and asked in

turn how he had managed to remain so nicely dressed.




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